Jump to content

Alexander Braverman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alexander Braverman
Born (1974-06-08) June 8, 1974 (age 50)
Alma materTel Aviv University
Known forGeometric Langlands program
Scientific career
FieldsMathematics
InstitutionsUniversity of Toronto, Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
Doctoral advisorJoseph Bernstein

Alexander Braverman (born June 8, 1974) is an Israeli mathematician.

Life and work

[edit]

Braverman was born in Moscow.[citation needed]. He earned in 1993 a BA degree in mathematics from the University of Tel Aviv, where in 1998 he received a Ph.D. (Kazhdan-Laumon Representations of Finite Chevalley Groups, Character Sheaves and Some Generalization of the Lefschetz-Verdier Trace Formula) under supervision of Joseph Bernstein.[1] From 1997 to 1999 he was a C.L.E. Moore instructor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and in 2004 Benjamin Peirce Lecturer at Harvard University. He was an associate professor at Brown University from 2004 to 2009 and then a full professor from 2009 to 2015. He is a full professor at University of Toronto since 2015 and an associate faculty member at Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. He was also a visiting scholar at Institute for Advanced Study (1997, 1999), the University of Paris VI and the Paris-Nord, the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, the Weizmann Institute, Clay Mathematics Institute and at the IHES in Paris.[citation needed]

Braverman specializes in the geometric Langlands program, the intersection of number theory, algebraic geometry and representation theory, which also has applications to mathematical physics.[citation needed]

In 2006 he was an invited speaker at the International Congress of Mathematicians in Madrid (Spaces of quasi-maps into the flag varieties and their applications).[citation needed]

References

[edit]
[edit]